That's a fair argument, and I even agree with it. It still kinda contradicts previous arguments about Ukraine being on its absolutely last legs, manpower-wise. In this thread, certain users constantly harp on about Ukrainian press gangs aggressively snatching young men from the streets because the country is allegedly that desperate and that short on recruits, just as they harp on about how the nefarious West is fighting this war "to the last Ukrainian".
Well, after the talks in Istanbul led to no tangible progress, it's kinda too late for that. But before these talks, Russia had all the opportunity in the world to show such a gesture of good will. They didn't because they, in fact, don't want diplomatic progress just yet. At a minimum, Russia wants to finish its conquest of the full Donbas before they are willing to wrap this war up. But once negotiations start in earnest, the expectation will be that they lead to a ceasefire relatively shortly. Blowing the negotiations once they have properly begun risks drawing Trump's ire and increased US support for Ukraine, so they stall and delay the start of this process as much as they can.
Ukraine, through figures like Oleksiy Arestovych, has openly framed this conflict as only one phase in a longer-term struggle with Russia—implying that even a full-scale military victory wouldn’t bring lasting peace. It's also an established fact that Ukrainian authorities are now using increasingly aggressive conscription tactics, including detaining men in public places—clear evidence of a mounting manpower crisis.
Meanwhile, the U.S. has consistently discouraged negotiations, especially in the early stages of the war. Third-party mediation efforts—such as by Israel, Turkey, and even African nations—have been quietly undermined or dismissed. Ukraine has since amended its legal framework to explicitly prohibit negotiations with Vladimir Putin while he remains in power, effectively eliminating any current diplomatic pathway.
At the same time, the West continues to escalate the conflict: supplying tanks, F-16 fighter jets, and long-range missiles, with recent approvals allowing Ukraine to strike deep inside Russian territory. This isn’t a strategy aimed at resolution—it’s a commitment to indefinite escalation. Under these conditions, peace isn’t just out of reach—it’s no longer even a policy objective.
Take the Istanbul talks, for example—hailed at the time as “The Peace Deal.” In reality, they were nothing more than preliminary feelers, never backed by a credible, enforceable framework. It felt performative, as if Ukraine’s leadership went through the motions only to later declare: “See? Pointless. There’s nothing to negotiate.” That’s not diplomacy—it’s pretext.